---arts&eDtertaiDmeDt t was the Wild ard night of perf or mances on Fox TV's Amel"ican ldo~ and 23-year-old Mal'Clu Lynche was standing in front of U1 judg .</p><p> In a new lwist. a dozen handpi k d semifinalists who hadn't yet made it to the final 12 were told to practice all week, but they wouldn't find out until the live broadcast whether they'd get a chance to sing for their one last shot The judges took turns handing out the verdict, and Lynche-Iooking hand some and confident and very Fame with his sleeveless vest, stud earrings, dan gling CruCifIX, and dancer's body-was televisioD America's favorite reality TV contest may be cutting contestants who appear "too gay" By Michael Giltz facing the tart-tongued Simon Cowell. "Marque, we brought you back be cause we all think you are a good singer," Cowell said as more than 24 million viewers watched. "However , we think you are more of a stage singer.</p><p> Therefore you will not be on the show tonight" THE ADVOCATE 1781 MAY 11, 2004 Lynche's mouth dropped open. "Are you serious?" he asked. "Sorry," said Cowell.</p><p> Lynche walked off the stage in a haze, never to be seen again.</p><p> What happened? Why would some one who all the judges agree has a good voice not be allowed to sing? Fox declined to put The Advocate in touch with Lynche, but some believe he was penalized for not seeming hetero enough.</p><p> Lynche has a real theater back ground-he joined the cast of the stage musical Fame on 42nd St. on April 13-but many Idol watchers believe that when the judges say someone is "too Broadway ," what they're really say ing is "You seem gay." Carla Hay of BiU board is one such observer. "For people who don't know the [gay] culture, that comment may go over their heads," says Hay, who covers TV for the music industry bible. "But from my pOint of view, that's basically what Simon is saying.</p><p> Anyone he deems 'too Broadway' is someone he feels is too ef feminate.</p><p> And he only says it about male singers.</p><p> He didn't say that for Frenchie Davis, who has been to Broadway. " Contestants who read as gay have be come scarce in the current third sea son-although that's an admittedly sub jective observation, since only one contestant so far, season 1 finalist Jim Verraros, has come out. "When I first au ditioned, there were so many, so many gay guys in the top 30," says Verraros, who begins a tour of gay clubs in May and stars in the new gay film festival fa vorite Eating Out. "We were definitely the most sexually diverse.</p><p> Absolutely ." Since Verraros's departur e, the only inarguably gay content on Idol has come from the mock gay-baiting between the superstraight Cowell and host Ryan Seacrest , who happily embraces his metrosexuality but says he isn't gay-or from kidding contestants like footballer Matthew Rogers, who sang to Cowell after he was voted off on March 24.</p><p> Hay notes that this season also seems "less gay" because women contestants are dominating and the judges rarely sin gle out women as "too Broadway." In stead, suspender-clad final-32 contestant Briana Ramirez-Rial (also unavailable to The Advocate) got the equivalent of an antilesbian slam when she was deemed too "angry" before getting cut.</p><p> Was she not feminine enough? "She looked very butch," Hay agrees.</p><p> The judges' gender standards may be enforced even in preliminaries.</p><p> An openly gay Idol hopeful named David, who sang for an anonymous screening panel at Houston's Minute Maid Park, recalls that he was told "I had an amaz ing voice and was very talented-but I needed to work on my 'marketability. '" Leaving the stadium, he says, "I sulked down the dark hallway pondering what 'marketability ' could be, exactly." Would viewers care whether an Idol favorite was gay? British fans don't Will Young, the first winner of the original Pop Idol, revealed that he's gay immedi ately after his victory and has since re leased two hit albums.</p><p> Another u.K. tal ent show, Fame Academy, was won by "baby dyke" Alex Parks.</p><p> No, it's not viewers who would mind, Hay says, "it's the record labels." Many fans, on the other hand, "would find Britney Spears portraying a Lolita when she was under age more offensive than if Clay Aiken was openly gay." Aiken has said emphatically that he's straight-and The Advocate has no in formation about Lynch's or Ramirez Rial's orientation-but Hay speculates that even the teenage Claymates proba bly wouldn't mind a gay Idol. "Kids now are more open-minded than their par ents or grandparents," she says. "If Clay were gay and came out of the closet, I don't think that would hurt his record sales." But we may never know .• GUtz is a regular contributor to several periodicals, including the New York Post.</p><p> L